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    Greater China
     Mar 18, 2008
Rubber chicken for China's sick soul
By Kent Ewing

HONG KONG - The grand plan to rein in China's runaway economy and heal multiple social and environmental ills, unveiled last week at the annual session of the National People's Congress (NPC), has excited legions of bureaucrats and pushed state media into overdrive. It promises to create a more efficient, transparent and accountable government through the formation of five new super ministries that will streamline the wayward bureaucracy and expedite needed economic, social and environmental reforms.

An explanatory report by the State Council, the government's highest executive body, stated, "The reshuffling is aimed at resolving long-term problems and contradictions as China's economy grows." State media have hailed the shake-up as a




major reform effort that will greatly strengthen national planning.

Unfortunately, however, China's problems cannot be cured by structural readjustments, no matter how sweeping and impressive they may appear. The real issue, which the leadership is loathe to address, is China's sick soul. And this latest round of NPC reforms amounts to little more than chicken (and rubber chicken at that) for that battered soul.

The 30-year culture of greed and corruption that has fueled the country's phenomenal economic rise cannot be reversed with a bureaucratic wave of the wand. Indeed, that is the Chinese leadership's chief problem right now - offering false, bureaucratic solutions to problems that have deep roots in a flawed political culture. And, of course, it does not help that China's legal structure was destroyed during Mao Zedong's disastrous Cultural Revolution in the 1960s and, in an ongoing project, is being rebuilt brick by brick.

Let's not forget that this is Beijing's sixth cabinet remake since 1982, so this is what Chinese leaders do to reassure the people when things are going wrong. And, on the surface, the latest reshuffle qualifies as a big splash. Look deeper, however, and the waters of Chinese society remain troubled and murky.

Despite repeated attempts to cool the overheating economy with interest-rate hikes and restrictions on bank lending, economic growth leaped ahead at 11.4% last year, and inflation surged to a 12-year high of 8.7% last month. Particularly worrying were food prices, which make up one-third of the country's consumer price index and rose 23.3% year-on-year last month. Pork (a Chinese favorite) led the way, with prices rising 63%, but the cost of vegetables and edible oil also increased by 46% and 41%, respectively.

While China's winter snowstorms no doubt played a part in the alarming price surges, these figures must nevertheless be deeply worrisome to President Hu Jintao, Premier Wen Jiabao and the nearly 3,000 NPC deputies that convened last week in Beijing. Protests from the grassroots - already a significant problem because of rampant official corruption and the growing income gap between rich and poor and urban and rural in Chinese society - can only be exacerbated by these latest developments.

What to do? In China - where, despite all the pre-Olympic promises of greater press freedom and international hopes of political reform, maintaining the supreme power of the Communist Party remains national priority number one - bureaucratic smoke-and-mirrors is to be expected. This latest shake-up should not be misconstrued as a grand plan to tackle multifarious challenges; rather, it represents a messy compromise between the dizzying points of power spread out across the vast bureaucracy.

That said, some of the changes should make a positive difference.
For example, upgrading the environmental watchdog, the State Environmental Protection Administration, to a cabinet-level ministry was long overdue and should give the formerly toothless agency more influence. Let's hope so as China's rivers, lakes and air become increasingly more poisonous as its juggernaut of an economy races along. To truly develop a coordinated and effective regulatory regime devoted to restoring China's degraded environment, however, the new ministry will require a much bigger budget and staff than the agency possessed. Last week's announcement left the budgetary future of the ministry unclear.

Although it was not part of the hoopla over new ministries, the absorption of the largely ineffectual State Food and Drug Administration into the already-existing Ministry of Health may also prove a positive change. Let's hope this means that China can now make more reliable guarantees on the quality of its exports, which in the past year have repeatedly been a source of scandal involving a wide range of products - from tainted foods and drugs to dangerous toys and exploding tires. The country has taken an international beating over the inferior quality of some of its exports. The world listened, mostly unconvinced, to Beijing's vehement defense of its safety record. This move is intended to offer further reassurance, but there is still a lot of work to do.

The new Ministry of Transport - which absorbs roads, highways, waterways and aviation - raises more questions than it answers. It is hard to see how it will function effectively without the inclusion of the country's dinosaur of a railway monopoly, whose weaknesses were exposed during the widespread transportation paralysis caused by recent winter storms. The worst winter weather in 50 years left tens of thousands of travelers stranded in the east and south during the week-long Lunar New Year holiday.

As the overwhelming majority of the Chinese population travels by train, failure to include the rail network in the new ministry is a huge omission betraying the bureaucratic infighting that the restructuring is really all about. In other transport sectors, market forces are enhancing quality and encouraging competition, but the Ministry of Railways has retained its throwback status as a state monopoly. That explains why, in a country of 1.3 billion people who are heavily reliant on rail transport, China can claim only 70,000 kilometers of track. By contrast, the US, which is about the same physical size as China but has only a quarter of its population, has more than 212,000 kilometers of track.

While the Ministry of Railways' days are surely numbered, its bureaucrats have lived to fight another day. Meanwhile, don't expect a coherent transportation scheme with such a big, backward player still operating by its own set of rules.

The new Ministry of Industry and Information faces a similar problem. The ministry will assume responsibilities previously held by the National Development and Reform Commission - the central-planning body that appears to be the biggest loser in the shake-up - the Commission of Science Technology and Industry for National Defense, the Ministry of Information Industry and the State Council Information Office.

Conspicuously absent from the new ministry's portfolio, however, is regulation of the electronic media, which will remain in the hands of the unpredictable State Administration of Radio, Film and Television (SARFT). Clearly, the SARFT censors were not ready to cede power to their new Big Brother. This means the wait must continue before the badly needed restructuring of radio and telecommunications can commence.

The new Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security, which subsumes both the Ministry of Personnel and the Ministry of Labor, is an attempt to address the widening inequality in the way the central government has dealt with professionals and common laborers. And the new Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Construction will be given the daunting task of coming to grips with skyrocketing real-estate prices.

A plan for a super Energy Ministry is also in the works. For now, however, bureaucrats must settle for a split in power, with a newly created energy commission given the brief of developing national energy strategies but a separate energy bureau charged with administering and overseeing the sector. Again, it's a bureaucratic tug-of-war.

Super ministries for Agriculture, Finance and Culture are also planned for the future, but let's not get ahead of ourselves. Things are complicated enough for the present - or are they?

Forget all the new acronyms that have been created and the old ones that have been lost. In the end, it is all pretty simple: bureaucratic restructuring is what masquerades as reform in China. Meanwhile, the rich-poor gap widens, the environment becomes increasingly defiled and corrupt local officials - rooted for the past 30 years in a culture of profit and greed - ignore the high-sounding rhetoric of the NPC and carry on with business as usual.

Kent Ewing is a teacher and writer at Hong Kong International School. He can be reached at kewing@hkis.edu.hk.

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Green whirlwind sweeps China (Mar 5, '08)

Hoops and hurdles for Olympic media (Feb 29, '08)

Cloud of scandal over environment (Feb 20, '08)


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